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Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus and The Market Efficiency

This document contains an economics exercise set with questions about consumer surplus, producer surplus, and market efficiency. It includes tables showing buyers' willingness to pay for a product and sellers' costs. It also includes diagrams illustrating consumer demand and supply curves with labeled areas for consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus. The questions test understanding of these concepts and how they are impacted by changes in price, quantity supplied and demanded, and market conditions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
197 views4 pages

Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus and The Market Efficiency

This document contains an economics exercise set with questions about consumer surplus, producer surplus, and market efficiency. It includes tables showing buyers' willingness to pay for a product and sellers' costs. It also includes diagrams illustrating consumer demand and supply curves with labeled areas for consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus. The questions test understanding of these concepts and how they are impacted by changes in price, quantity supplied and demanded, and market conditions.

Uploaded by

Berk Mızrak
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Econ 100.

SPRING 2019
Exercise Set 6
CONSUMER SURPLUS, PRODUCER SURPLUS and the MARKET EFFICIENCY

BUYER WILLINGNESS TO PAY


MIKE $50.00
SANDY $30.00
JONATHAN $20.00
HALEY $10.00

1. The table shows the willingness to pay of four buyers. If the price of the product is $15, then who would be
willing to purchase the product?
a. Mike
b. Mike and Sandy
c. Mike, Sandy, and Jonathan
d. Mike, Sandy, Jonathan, and Haley

2. If the price of the product is $18, then their total consumer surplus is
a. $38.
b. $42.
c. $46.
d. $72.

3. If the price of the product is $30, then their total consumer surplus is
a. $-10.
b. $-6.
c. $20.
d. $30.

4. A consumer’s willingness to pay directly measures


a. the extent to which advertising and other external forces have influenced the consumer’s decisions
regarding his or her purchases of goods and services.
b. the cost of a good to the buyer.
c. how much a buyer values a good.
d. consumer surplus.

5. Consumer surplus is
a. the amount a buyer is willing to pay for a good minus the amount the buyer actually pays for it.
b. the amount a buyer is willing to pay for a good minus the cost of producing the good.
c. the amount by which the quantity supplied of a good exceeds the quantity demanded of the good.
d. a buyer’s willingness to pay for a good plus the price of the good.

6. If the cost of producing sofas decreases, then consumer surplus in the sofa market will
a. increase.
b. decrease.
c. remain constant.
d. increase for some buyers and decrease for other buyers.

7. If the price of oak lumber increases, what happens to consumer surplus in the market for oak cabinets?
a. It increases.
b. It decreases.
c. It will not change consumer surplus; only producer surplus changes.
d. It depends on what event led to the increase in the price of oak lumber.
8. Which of the following is not true when the price of a good or service falls?
a. Buyers who were already buying the good or service are better off.
b. Some new buyers, who are now willing to buy, enter the market.
c. The total consumer surplus in the market increases.
d. The total value of purchases before and after the price change is the same.

9. Refer to Figure 7-1. When the price is P1, consumer surplus is FIGURE 7-1
a. A.
b. A + B.
c. A + B + C.
d. A + B + D.

10. Refer to Figure 7-1. When the price is P2, consumer


surplus is
a. A.
b. B.
c. A + B.
d. A + B + C.

11. Refer to Figure 7-1. When the price rises from P1 to P2,
consumer surplus
a. increases by an amount equal to A.
b. decreases by an amount equal to B + C.
c. increases by an amount equal to B + C.
d. decreases by an amount equal to C.

12. Refer to Figure 7-1. Area C represents


a. the decrease in consumer surplus that results from a downward-sloping demand curve.
b. consumer surplus to new consumers who enter the market when the price falls from P2 to P1.
c. the increase in producer surplus when quantity sold increases from Q2 to Q1.
d. the decrease in consumer surplus to each consumer in the market when the price increases from P1 to P2.

13. Refer to Figure 7-1. When the price rises from P1 to P2, which of the following statements is not true?
a. The buyers who still buy the good are worse off because they now pay more.
b. Some buyers leave the market because they are not willing to buy the good at the higher price.
c. Buyers place a higher value on the good after the price increase.
d. Consumer surplus in the market falls.

14. A seller is willing to sell a product only if the seller receives a price that is at least as great as
a. the seller’s producer surplus.
b. the seller’s cost of production.
c. the seller’s profit.
d. the average willingness to pay of buyers of the product.

15. Producer surplus is


a. measured using the demand curve for a good.
b. always a negative number for sellers in a competitive market.
c. the amount a seller is paid minus the cost of production.
d. the opportunity cost of production minus the cost of producing goods that go unsold.

16. Producer surplus measures


a. the benefits to sellers of participating in a market.
b. the costs to sellers of participating in a market.
c. the price that buyers are willing to pay for sellers’ output of a good or service.
d. the benefit to sellers of producing a greater quantity of a good or service than buyers demand.
17. Refer to Figure 7-4. Which area represents producer surplus when the price is P1? FIGURE 7-4
a. BCE b. ACF
c. ABED d. DEF

18. Refer to Figure 7-4. Which area represents producer surplus


when the price is P2?
a. BCE b. ACF
c. ABED d. AFEB

19. Refer to Figure 7-4. Which area represents the increase in


producer surplus when the price rises from P1 to P2?
a. BCE b. ACF
c. ABED d. AFEB

20. Refer to Figure 7-4. When the price rises from P1 to P2, which
area represents the increase in producer surplus to existing
producers?
a. BCE b. ACF
c. DEF d. ABED

21. Refer to Figure 7-4. Which area represents the increase in producer surplus when the price rises from P1 to P2
due to new producers entering the market?
a. BCE b. ACF
c. DEF d. AFEB

Table 7-4
SELLER COST
DALE $1,500
JILL $1,200
DENISE $1,000
CATHERINE $750
JACKSON $500

22. Refer to Table 7-4. If the market price is $1,000, the producer surplus in the market is
a. $700. b. $750.
c. $2,250. d. $3,700.

23. Refer to Table 7-4. If the market price is $1,100, the combined total cost of all participating sellers is
a. $3,700. b. $2,700.
c. $2,250. d. $1,500.

24. Refer to Table 7-4. If the price is $1,000,


a. Denise is an eager supplier. b. Catherine is an eager supplier.
c. Dale’s producer surplus is $500. d. All of the above are correct.

25. Refer to Table 7-4. If the price is $775, who would be willing to supply the product?
a. Dale and Jill b. Dale, Jill and Denise
c. Denise, Catherine and Jackson d. Catherine and Jackson

26. Refer to Table 7-4. Suppose each of the five sellers can supply at most one unit of the good; then the market
quantity supplied is exactly 3 if the price is
a. $670. b. $770.
c. $970. d. $1,170.
27. Refer to Figure 7-10. The equilibrium (market-clearing) price is FIGURE 7-10
a. P1. b. P2.
c. P3. d. P4.

28. Refer to Figure 7-10. At the equilibrium, total consumer surplus


is represented by the area
a. A. b. A + B + C.
c. D + E + F. d. A + B + C + D + E + F.

29. Refer to Figure 7-10. At the market-clearing equilibrium, total


producer surplus is represented by the area
a. F. b. F + G.
c. D + E + F. d. D + E + F + G + H.

30. Refer to Figure 7-10. At the market-clearing equilibrium, total


surplus is represented by the area
a. A + B + C. b. A + B + D + F.
c. A + B + C + D + E + F. d. A + B + C + D + E + F + G + H.

31. Refer to Figure 7-10. When there is a minimum price of P3, total consumer surplus is represented by the area
a. A. b. A + B + C.
c. D + E + F. d. A + B + C + D + E + F.

32. Refer to Figure 7-10. When there is a minimum price of P3, total producer surplus is represented by the area
a. F. b. F + G.
c. D + E + F. d. F + D + B.

33. Refer to Figure 7-10. When there is a minimum price of P3, total surplus is represented by the area
a. A + B + C. b. A + B + D + F.
c. A + B + C + D + E + F. d. A + B + C + D + E + F + G + H.

34. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the equilibrium price, consumer surplus is FIGURE 7-9
a. $480. b. $640.
c. $1,120. d. $1,280.

35. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the equilibrium price, producer surplus is


a. $480. b. $640.
c. $1,120. d. $1,280.

36. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the equilibrium price, total surplus is


a. $480. b. $640.
c. $1,120. d. $1,280.

37. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the maximum price of $8, consumer


surplus is
a. $480. b. $640.
c. $680. d. $1,280.

38. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the maximum price of $8, producer


surplus is
a. $160. b. $640.
c. $1,120. d. $1,280.

39. Refer to Figure 7-9. At the maximum price of $8, total surplus is
a. $480. b. $840. c. $1,120. d. $1,280.

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